Everything changes when she meets Domenico (played by Pierfrancesco Favino) at a company party. Domenico is a married father of two who works for a catering company. The attraction between them is immediate, intense, and undeniable.
Recommendation: If you enjoy character-driven dramas, emotional storytelling, and complex themes, "Come Undone" is a must-watch. Fans of Emily Blunt, Ioan Gruffudd, and Lasse Hallström will also appreciate this movie.
Alba is the emotional core of the film. She is a mother, a wife, and a woman who suddenly finds herself disappearing into her own life. Cruz plays her not as a villain or a victim, but as a woman waking up to a terrifying hollowness. Her decision to leave is not a calculated attack on Rocco, but an act of self-preservation. She isn't running toward another man; she is running away from the version of herself that no longer fits.
In the landscape of Italian contemporary cinema, few directors possess the ability to blend raw emotional turmoil with authentic, everyday realism quite like Silvio Soldini. Best known for his charming Bread and Tulips (2000), Soldini took a darker, more intensely intimate turn with his 2010 film, (Italian title: Cosa voglio di più , translating to "What More Do I Want").
Maya finds her mother’s hidden journals. They don’t describe madness—they describe fear. Lena writes about a man named “Eli” who visited often, a family friend with a key to the inn. Lena’s entries become frantic: “He says Maya likes the game. But she cries when he leaves. I can’t remember anymore. He makes us forget.”